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| The wood stove pellets are made of hardwood byproducts, and not pine. I would be afraid to use the hardwood pellets because they may contain walnut products which could cause a horse to founder. |
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Industrial Srength Barrel Racer
Posts: 7268
     
| I use lime - cheap and works. I found it at a lumber yard here. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 928
      Location: Northern CA | Just Learning - 2014-12-15 2:41 PM The wood stove pellets are made of hardwood byproducts, and not pine. I would be afraid to use the hardwood pellets because they may contain walnut products which could cause a horse to founder.
I am unsure of your location, but here the wood stove pellets are made of fir, and sometimes a hint of cedar. Perfectly safe. You can look on the bags or the companies website to see what they contain. |
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Industrial Srength Barrel Racer
Posts: 7268
     
| I tried the wood stove for my gelding who makes a "pee hole," they didn't break down and they were hard to walk on (for me as they rolled around underfoot). I'd like to try them again. Are there certain ones that work better than others? |
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Extreme Veteran
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| Has anyone ever had any problems with the horses eating the pellet bedding? I know we have a few horses that are little piggies so I'd be nervous about that |
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 Expert
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| Tatum2 - 2014-12-16 9:48 AM
Has anyone ever had any problems with the horses eating the pellet bedding? I know we have a few horses that are little piggies so I'd be nervous about that
I was just thinking about this! I feed safechoice feed and it looks an aweful lot like those bedding pellets! lol mine would munch down I am sure.. Even if they only had a mouthful they will expand and can cause major problems. My horses even nibble a tiny bit on shavings but not really. They have hay in front of them 24/7 and they still do it.. |
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  You just got to get mean and mean it.
     Location: Arkansas | When we had a barnfull of mare's and foal's, we discovered pelleted bedding. And never looked back. Cost about $30 a stall. And misted them, just followed the dire tion's on the bag. So much easier that shavings. Just pick the wet stops and apples and toss and fluff. No more smell and no, they didn't try to eat it. LOL Probably because we misted them. Only added more pellet's as needed. Probably a bag every 2-3 week's. So much easier to used than shavings. And they would lay down in the fluff. LOL |
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  Champ
Posts: 19623
       Location: Peg-Leg Julia Grimm | FLITASTIC - 2014-12-16 9:55 AM Tatum2 - 2014-12-16 9:48 AM Has anyone ever had any problems with the horses eating the pellet bedding? I know we have a few horses that are little piggies so I'd be nervous about that I was just thinking about this! I feed safechoice feed and it looks an aweful lot like those bedding pellets! lol mine would munch down I am sure.. Even if they only had a mouthful they will expand and can cause major problems. My horses even nibble a tiny bit on shavings but not really. They have hay in front of them 24/7 and they still do it..
I've had some new horses taste them. After the first bite they don't try them again. |
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 I'm not opinionated
Posts: 4597
      Location: Online | Just Learning - 2014-12-15 3:41 PM The wood stove pellets are made of hardwood byproducts, and not pine. I would be afraid to use the hardwood pellets because they may contain walnut products which could cause a horse to founder.
^^^This^^^ I was told to never use fuel pellets. I use the bedding pellets in my trailer, they are around $5-$6 a bag. They work way better than shavings and last a lot longer. My horses are all outside, I'm not rich enough for a barn. But I will put a bag of shavings in their sheds when it gets too wet. I don't know why kitty litter or floor dry wouldn't work though. Lime is usually easy to get at any hardware store. |
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  Sock eating dog owner
Posts: 4557
     Location: Where the pavement ends and the West begins Utah | If you dont have cement or rubber mats dig a chinese drain at the wet spot about a foot around fill with rocks then sand then rocks, sand then the regular dirt that will help drain the stall. It will soak up under ground. Lime is good so is Diatomacious earth. |
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 Expert
Posts: 4121
   Location: SE Louisiana | The availability of lime and limestone depends on where you live. I'm from Missouri and everyone there, south of The River, lives on top of a gigantic limestone aquifer... We used to get our lime in dump-truck loads.. works great for killing the smell of urine. (and cheaper by the truck-load) |
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Extreme Veteran
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| Just a random thought.. I know humans that are pregnant are not suppose to be around cat litter due to causeing miscarriages and birth defects what about pregnant mares using it in their stalls??  |
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 Expert
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| Tatum2 - 2014-12-18 3:05 PM Just a random thought.. I know humans that are pregnant are not suppose to be around cat litter due to causeing miscarriages and birth defects what about pregnant mares using it in their stalls?? 
HUH??? This is a new one for me ... never heard that one ..... |
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Extreme Veteran
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| lindseylou2290 - 2014-12-18 3:13 PM
Tatum2 - 2014-12-18 3:05 PM Just a random thought.. I know humans that are pregnant are not suppose to be around cat litter due to causeing miscarriages and birth defects what about pregnant mares using it in their stalls?? 
HUH??? This is a new one for me ... never heard that one .....
I cannot remember where I read/heard/learned this... It's just been one of those huh? things that stick with you |
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 Extreme Veteran
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| Tatum2 - 2014-12-18 3:19 PM
lindseylou2290 - 2014-12-18 3:13 PM
Tatum2 - 2014-12-18 3:05 PM Just a random thought.. I know humans that are pregnant are not suppose to be around cat litter due to causeing miscarriages and birth defects what about pregnant mares using it in their stalls?? 
HUH??? This is a new one for me ... never heard that one .....
I cannot remember where I read/heard/learned this... It's just been one of those huh? things that stick with you
The cat litter itself isn't what is a concern for pregnant women, it's the risk of being exposed to Toxoplasma via cat feces that is dangerous for pregnant women. That is why you shouldn't clean the litter box when you're pregnant!
http://www.cdc.gov/parasites/toxoplasmosis/gen_info/pregnant.html |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 316
  
| k.maddocks24 - 2014-12-18 3:32 PM
Tatum2 - 2014-12-18 3:19 PM
lindseylou2290 - 2014-12-18 3:13 PM
Tatum2 - 2014-12-18 3:05 PM Just a random thought.. I know humans that are pregnant are not suppose to be around cat litter due to causeing miscarriages and birth defects what about pregnant mares using it in their stalls?? 
HUH??? This is a new one for me ... never heard that one .....
I cannot remember where I read/heard/learned this... It's just been one of those huh? things that stick with you
The cat litter itself isn't what is a concern for pregnant women, it's the risk of being exposed to Toxoplasma via cat feces that is dangerous for pregnant women. That is why you shouldn't clean the litter box when you're pregnant!
http://www.cdc.gov/parasites/toxoplasmosis/gen_info/pregnant.html[/...
Ah got ya.. knew it was something to do with not cleaning the litter box! |
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 "Spaz-tacular"!!
Posts: 20309
       Location: Bennett, CO | CAt litter or Oil Sorb works great... But when I lived it Oklahoma- I was able to purchase Limestone screenings by the truckload... it was cheap, and is basically catlitter.. I put it in all my stalls.. wonderful stuff!
On the Stove pellets- not all pellets are the same. We use Rocky Mtn Pellets in our Pellet stove- and in my stalls! It is Beetle Kill Pine from North Central Colorado.. 100% pine.. works great for both application! |
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Blessed 
                      Location: Here | gotothewhip - 2014-12-19 1:20 PM CAt litter or Oil Sorb works great... But when I lived it Oklahoma- I was able to purchase Limestone screenings by the truckload... it was cheap, and is basically catlitter.. I put it in all my stalls.. wonderful stuff!
On the Stove pellets- not all pellets are the same. We use Rocky Mtn Pellets in our Pellet stove- and in my stalls! It is Beetle Kill Pine from North Central Colorado.. 100% pine.. works great for both application!
thanks |
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Red Bull Agressive
Posts: 5981
         Location: North Dakota | TessBelle - 2014-12-15 9:56 AM The farrier told me to use powdered lime but I don't know where to get it so kitty litter was what I came up with. I look and the PDZ that I use has the same ingrediance that my cats litter has but the kitty litter smells good.
Saw some powdered lime at TSC yesterday and thought of you. |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 618
 
| I wouldn't use lime. My vet told me not to bc it can cause damage to horses lungs. The particle is small and they inhale it when they root around in shavings. Baking soda is a good odor killer and super cheap. I use the pdz. I know it expensive but it's worth it.
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